Gaia Data Release 2. Calibration and mitigation of electronic offset effects in the data
N. C. Hambly, M. Cropper, S. Boudreault, C. Crowley, R. Kohley, J.H.J., de Bruijne, C. Dolding, C. Fabricius, G. Seabroke, M. Davidson, N. Rowell, R., Collins, N. Cross, J. Martin-Fleitas, S. Baker, M. Smith, P. Sartoretti, O., Marchal, D. Katz, F. de Angeli, G. Busso, M. Riello

TL;DR
This paper details the calibration and correction of electronic offset effects in Gaia Data Release 2, ensuring high-precision astrometry by modeling and mitigating offset non-uniformities in the satellite's CCD electronics.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed model for electronic offset non-uniformities in Gaia's CCDs and demonstrates effective calibration methods to recover optimal data quality.
Findings
Offset non-uniformities can be modeled and corrected effectively.
Calibration restores video-chain noise-limited performance in Gaia data.
The method improves the accuracy of Gaia's astrometric measurements.
Abstract
The European Space Agency Gaia satellite was launched into orbit around L2 in December 2013. This ambitious mission has strict requirements on residual systematic errors resulting from instrumental corrections in order to meet a design goal of sub-10 microarcsecond astrometry. During the design and build phase of the science instruments, various critical calibrations were studied in detail to ensure that this goal could be met in orbit. In particular, it was determined that the video-chain offsets on the analogue side of the analogue-to-digital conversion electronics exhibited instabilities that could not be mitigated fully by modifications to the flight hardware. We provide a detailed description of the behaviour of the electronic offset levels on microsecond timescales, identifying various systematic effects that are known collectively as offset non-uniformities. The effects manifest…
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